Saturday, August 27, 2011

Indy Star - Indianapolis International Airport officials are reconsidering their plan to remove a prominent, three-story sculptural painting inside the terminal and replace it with a digital screen full of advertisements and scrolling art. The move follows an outcry from the arts community -- and a nudge from Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard -- after the proposed removal of the piece, "Chrysalis," was reported earlier this month. Read more.

The Drum (UK) - Universities in Dundee, Lancaster and Newcastle, working alongside the Royal College of Art, will lead a regional consortium that will aim to grow the UK economy through the digital and creative industries, having been awarded a £4 million grant. Read more.

How Do (England) - Lancaster University, in partnership with Newcastle University and the Royal College of Art has been awarded £4m to lead a regional consortium aimed at boosting the UK economy through the growth of the digital and creative industries.

Lancaster is one of four universities in the UK chosen by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) to lead a Knowledge Exchange Hub for the Creative Economy for the next four years. Each of the four universities will lead consortia that will include other universities, creative businesses, arts and culture organisations and other agencies. Read more.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Seattle Times - You can't trust a photograph — and that's what makes it so fascinating.

Some surreal photographic visions involve no wizardry beyond elaborate staging. Other seemingly "natural" shots are the result of self-effacing camera trickery you'd never guess was at work unless you were informed about it.

In "The Digital Eye: Photographic Art in the Electronic Age," the new exhibit at the Henry Art Gallery, curator Sylvia Wolf places the latest computer-generated advances in the medium in a satisfyingly deep context by prefacing the digital goods on display with two small galleries of work from the pre-digital age.

She goes back as far as 1856 to show that photography, even in its infancy, always had a little hocus-pocus to it. Read more.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Bloomberg - The designer and architect Ron Arad is good at rethinking familiar objects.

In 1993, he came up with “Bookworm,” library shelving that’s curvilinear rather than horizontal. His “Curtain Call” at the Roundhouse in London is equally simple yet surprising. It’s a projection screen that isn’t flat, solid and rectangular. It’s circular, translucent and flexible. Read more.

Chicago Tribune - A decision by Indianapolis International Airport officials to take down a three-story sculptural painting and replace it with a video screen that will show advertising is being criticized by that artist and others.

The glass-and-canvas piece called "Chrysalis" will be removed by the end of August from its prominent spot over the main escalators in the passenger terminal where it has been since its opening in 2008, said Carlo Bertolini, a spokesman for the Indianapolis Airport Authority. He said the video screen displaying digital art and advertising will go up next month. Read more.

Pad Gadget - Autodesk has just released 123D Sculpt, an app for the iPad that allows you to take shapes, colors and textures and turn them into personalized pieces of art. 123D Sculpt represents one of the latest entries into a category of apps that offer to nurture and expand our creativity more than the traditional entertainment or productivity enhancing experiences we are used to. Read more.

MIT News - MIT has long been a premier center of technological innovation. On July 1, a new locus for literary innovation was added to the mix: the campus began hosting the headquarters of the Electronic Literature Organization.

The Electronic Literature Organization, or ELO, is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization composed of an international community that includes writers, artists, teachers, scholars and developers. The Organization’s focus is new literary forms that are made to be read on digital systems, including smartphones, Web browsers and networked computers. Read more.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

NewHampshire.com - Co-owners of a Londonderry media production company are the winners of the 2011 New Hampshire 48 Hour Film Project.

Shuffle, a silent film about a group of teenagers who get caught playing a game of co-ed strip poker, was produced by Londonderry resident Scott Orlosk and Art Murphy, of Deerfield. Together, they own Indiefair Digital Arts on Londonderry Road. Read more.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Holland Sentinel (Michigan) - The Holland area’s Daniel Flores was recently honored as a National Club Tech Digital Arts Festivals winner with an trip to Denver. The trip was sponsored by Boys & Girls Clubs of America, Microsoft and Comcast. Read more.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

TC Palm (Florida) - Boys & Girls Clubs of America (BGCA), Microsoft and Comcast recognized D’ojane Tippins, 14, and Jesse Forbes, 15, as National Club Tech Digital Arts Festivals winners with an expense-paid trip to Denver. Tippins produced the song Fun in Funky while Forbes created a photo illustration entitled Space (FreeLunchPhotography.com images and song attached).

“It gave me courage to sing in front of a crowd and helped me improve my musical talent,” said Tippins about her experience participating in the digital arts contest. Read more.

Art Info - Digital artist Evan Roth took over the 90 Bowery Internet cafe last in New York City's Chinatown last Friday for a "speed show," a new media art exhibition format that invades an ordinary space and turns it into an art gallery — for a limited time only. Roth's exhibition, called "When We Were Kings," debuted 12 new works and several old ones that he's updated. Read more.

The latest version from Serif - a design, publishing and creative software developer - promises to give creative-types all the tools they need to produce outstanding vector art, graphics and animations. Read more.

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Max Eternity: Artist - Writer - Historian

Max Eternity is a visionary polymath, whose expertise includes art, design, writing, history, dance, food, music and social criticism. He is a contributing author to a college textbook, entitled At Issue: Poverty in America, published by Gale/Cengage (2015) and since 2010, Eternity has been a featured writer at Truthout.org, also being one of the first arts writers at The Huffington Post. Eternity is currently writing three new books whose working titles are From Bauhaus | To Black Mountain, The Agency of Art: War Pedagogy and Social Change in the Western World – 1915 to 1965, and Beyond Oppression: Colonization and the Language of Heroes.